OAS, IDB, and British Council present the study “The Economic Impact of the Creative Industries in the Americas”

The Organization of American States (OAS), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and the British Council, jointly commissioned a report, a first of its kind exercise, to show the important contribution to growth, jobs, and trade in the hemisphere generated by creative and cultural activities such as the arts, design, music, and advertising, amongst others. [1]

Some $640 billion was the value of the world’s exports of creative goods and services in 2011, of which $87 billion or 14 percent originated in the Americas, according to data compiled by Oxford Economics in the study “The Economic Impact of the Creative Industries in the Americas,” a collation of existing quantitative data on the economic performance of the creative and cultural industries.

The report surveys 44 countries—including 34 countries in the Americas and 10 benchmark countries from other regions around the world. It also recommends ways to improve and standardize national measurement frameworks to better track trends within and across countries and support more evidence-based policymaking.

The contribution by creative industries to GDP varies widely across the region: from just under 2 percent in Chile to more than 10 percent in Brazil and the United States. Growth rates in the sector are consistently higher than the average of the economy.

The creative sector is also an important provider of employment in some countries: between 5 percent to 11 percent of jobs in Canada, Colombia, Mexico, and Trinidad and Tobago. Moreover, the sector has a higher percentage of youth employment than the rest of the economy.

The sector is becoming increasingly international. Creative exports from the countries in the Americas accounted for 2.2 percent of all their exports of goods and services. The leading creative export categories for the Americas include:

In presenting the study at the 6th World Summit on Arts and Culture in Santiago, Chile, on January 16, 2014, the OAS, IDB, and the British Council expressed their hope that the study would raise awareness of the creative sector's enormous potential for economic development and innovation for the region. They also pointed to the critical need to move forward towards more harmonized and rigorous measurement mechanisms already underway to ensure appropriate policy responses to the sector's needs and opportunities.

The three institutions pledged to continue their joint collaboration to promote the creative economy in the hemisphere.

The study is composed of a narrative report, that includes summary dashboards for seven countries, which can be downloaded from any of the following websites: OAS, IDB, British Council